Diagnosis Post
Field of flowers, 71
and sunny, the native
intelligence of trees
and owls, bees and
dolphins all now
in the air: what is
the nature of
nature but
a buzz, a shriek, a hum:
a whistle that echoes in the dark, what a hoot
deceptive as a mushroom in the wild.
Getting up the hill
wasn’t the hard part
that morning, but
the downward leg,
weak rubber walk,
a mudslide of me hold on
down a mountain-
side of what if, an
avalanche falling
like the loose
bowels of worry.
These wild flowers
special, precious,
fragile post-picking, help me
their wildness cut out:
they can’t be
zinnias or peonies
or dahlias now.
I am uneven land, a
ridge of regret, furrowed
but fallow, unseeded
under the sun.
About the author
Patrick Davis is a poet and essayist. His work has previously appeared in Provincetown Arts, and he has ghost-written five books for major publishing houses. He conducted his graduate research in American literature at Washington University in St. Louis under the mentorship of William H. Gass. He and his husband live in Atlanta with a bulldog named Ox.